We used to hide up on the hills Drinking beer & chucking rocks down at the highway. At the rolling 18 wheelers that went crawling down the road. Every time we'd hear 'em hit, Our hearts would start to thumping & 'a pounding, Just 'a praying it was never someone's daddy that we know. & We'd sit out in the woods Burning cedar with our lighters & just laughing. Smoking cigarettes & lying about girls that we had known. Every time we named a name, Our hearts would start to thumping & 'a pounding. This town's so small we're praying that our cover won't be blown. We said, "My friends we're bound to live a long, long, time... & What's the use in living if we can't come close to dying? I'd rather ball the world up in a pocket & be through, Than to spend another minute being scared of something new." When we finally turned sixteen We got our parent's cars & tortured all the gravel. We tried to point our reckless Wheels to roll us past the edge of town. One drove a Lincoln Continental. One drove a truck that you'd hear coming for a mile. One drove right off a cliff & left his brother in the pile. I had a different haircut then. It was long on top & shaved up on the sides. I was looking for myself in places I would usually hide from. I liked the older crowd I guess, Skipping school & smoking reefer by the creek – & All those older girls that let me feel 'em up in the back seat. I said "My friends we're bound to live a long, long, time, But what's the use in living if we can't come close to dying? I'd rather ball the world up in a pocket & be through Than spend another minute being scared of something new." I swear these tales I tell are mostly true. Sometimes those city folks don't know What all the small town boys will do. When drugs & love & drinking is all you have to pass the time 'Til we move into your city & try leave it all behind. I made it back the other day. I was glad that most my buddies moved away. I visited a few that wound up stuck there in their graves. The older kids they stuck around. They up & found themselves a new, young crowd. They just can't escape the gravity that holds them in this town. So we sat 'round drinking beers. They were smoking speed & counting down the years. I was so sad to see them stuck inside a world of rust & tears. So I turned around & waved. & I told 'em I'd be back same time, next year. Just worried to my bones I'd find that there was no one here. They said, "My friend we're bound to live a long, long, time, But what's the use in living if we can't come close to dying?" Me, I'd rather ball the world up in a pocket & be through, Than spend another minute being scared of something new.